Krause Neal
School of Public Health and Institute of Gerontology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2002 Nov;57(6):S332-47. doi: 10.1093/geronb/57.6.s332.
A conceptual model is evaluated that explores the relationship between church-based support and health. In the process, an effort is made to see if the relationships in this model differ for older White and African American people.
Interviews were conducted with a national sample of 748 older White and 752 older Black people. The responses of 1,126 of these study participants are used in the analyses presented herein. Survey measures were administered to assess church-based social ties and health.
Empirical support was provided for the following theoretical linkages: Older people who attend church often feel their congregations are more cohesive; older people in highly cohesive congregations receive more spiritual and emotional support from their fellow parishioners; older respondents who receive more church-based support have a more personal relationship with God; older people who feel more closely connected with God are more optimistic; and older people who are more optimistic enjoy better health. Data further reveal that older Black people are more likely than older White people to reap the health-related benefits of religion.
The findings contribute to research on religion and health by specifying how the salubrious effects of religion may arise.
对一个探索基于教会的支持与健康之间关系的概念模型进行评估。在此过程中,努力探究该模型中的关系在老年白人和非裔美国人中是否存在差异。
对全国范围内748名老年白人和752名老年黑人进行了访谈。本分析使用了其中1126名研究参与者的回答。采用调查措施来评估基于教会的社会关系和健康状况。
为以下理论联系提供了实证支持:经常去教堂的老年人觉得他们的会众更有凝聚力;在凝聚力高的会众中的老年人从教友那里获得更多精神和情感支持;获得更多基于教会支持的老年受访者与上帝有更亲密的关系;感觉与上帝联系更紧密的老年人更乐观;更乐观的老年人健康状况更好。数据进一步显示,老年黑人比老年白人更有可能从宗教中获得与健康相关的益处。
这些发现通过明确宗教的有益影响可能产生的方式,为宗教与健康的研究做出了贡献。